She Didn’t Hack Anything. She Just Right-Clicked.
Kiandria, a Black woman in tech, used publicly accessible tools to inspect the backend of GiveSendGo’s fundraising page. What she found? The payment processor behind the campaign...
When a white woman named Shiloh Hendrix went viral for calling a Black child the N-word—and then raised over $700,000 through a GiveSendGo fundraiser—Kiandria Demone decided to do something about it.
Not with a protest.
Not with a lawsuit.
With a right-click.
Kiandria, a Black woman in tech, used publicly accessible tools to inspect the backend of GiveSendGo’s fundraising page. What she found at first? Square in the source code of the campaign.
She flagged it. Shared it. Made noise.
And it worked—Square pulled out.
But Stripe, another major payment processor still enabling the fundraiser? Silent.
Let’s be clear: this wasn’t a hack. It was HTML.
This wasn’t illegal. It was accountability.
But instead of celebrating her, some are trying to discredit her. To paint her as dangerous. Because when Black women use tech to expose the systems protecting white supremacy—it shakes things.
This is what resistance looks like in 2025.
And we’re going to keep covering it.
At The Black Wall Street Times, we tell the truth—even when it threatens power. Especially then.
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